What Book Turned Dorian Gray Evil?

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

Комментарии • 91

  • @nickbenstead7285
    @nickbenstead7285 Год назад +49

    As an English teacher currently covering The Picture of Dorian Gray with my students, I cannot express how happy they all were to finally have an answer to "what book was he reading?"

  • @aayushmaadhikari658
    @aayushmaadhikari658 3 года назад +44

    I love it how you say "he is". Shows how a person's physical body can be perished but the artist and art survive eternally.

  • @soumavagoswami7487
    @soumavagoswami7487 3 года назад +75

    I think Oscar Wilde uses the same techniques of writing about leisurely indulgence in the middle-portions of 'The Picture of Dorian Gray', which may seem boring/tedious to many people. But in my opinion, these are exactly the portions where we need to read the novel carefully.
    And, thank you very much for the recommendation. This channel and the other one, to me, are nothing short of a treasure trove.

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  3 года назад +14

      Wow - you're right :) That's a really nice thought. I personally enjoyed these passages more than the Sibyl Vane subplot, but I totally understand why one might wish to skip them, and why one, as you say, should read them carefully. Thank you for the great comment!

    • @amandawar6864
      @amandawar6864 3 года назад +8

      I finished the book yesterday and i skipped the part you are talking about 😂.

    • @shikhasharma8831
      @shikhasharma8831 Год назад +1

      I read it today skipped that part hihi. Chapter 11 is not there for me in the novel 🤣🤣

    • @Vivian-ks7jr
      @Vivian-ks7jr Год назад +2

      I agree. I actually stopped reading the book once I got those sections because I was having a hard time paying attention, but once I picked it back up and finished it I could understand the importance in context better.

    • @diannerrss
      @diannerrss Год назад

      Those were the toughest sections to get through for sure 😅 I definitely had to reread them a couple times

  • @jimowen1262
    @jimowen1262 2 года назад +7

    I read A Rebours 30 years ago. I think it was the most memorable book I have read and I am a constant reader. You are the first person I haver ever heard mention it. Thank you so much for your comments.

  • @CirioRich
    @CirioRich 15 дней назад +1

    Every single times I read The Picture of Dorian Gray I identify new points that must be discussed about the story and Victorian era.

  • @ornleifs
    @ornleifs 3 года назад +6

    Got it and read about half of it a few years ago and liked it but for some reason never finished it - this video makes me want to revisit it and finish it.

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  3 года назад +3

      I think the lack of solid narrative makes it quite easy to abandon. Enjoyable to dip in and out of, but not necessary to read all the way through from beginning to end :)

  • @henrikibsen6258
    @henrikibsen6258 Год назад +3

    I have a theory, based on an idea in Plato's republic, that you shouldn't read just anything when you're young. If you're going to read Rand or Sade or whatever writers you might consider dangerous (Perhaps even Shakespeare), wait till your 30s so you don't accidentally add some of their traits to your very sense of self.
    I don't really believe this theory, but it's worth thinking about.

  • @asdabir
    @asdabir 2 года назад +5

    Sounds like a perfect audiobook to have on while doing chores or hobbies

  • @raginimishra1931
    @raginimishra1931 3 года назад +14

    Why were books depicted as the instruments of the devil in the Elizabethan plays especially 'Doctor Faustus' and 'The Tempest'. As Faustus in the end pledges to burn his books and Prospero apparently drowns his books.

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  3 года назад +4

      That's such an awesome question. Thank you - I would love to explore this one :)

    • @michelle6250
      @michelle6250 6 месяцев назад

      Funny I came across your comment now as Kenya finally stands up against a corrupt gvt that’s desperately trying to destroy the education system. Many of us who were integral to lighting the fire under people all realized it’s because we see too many similarities in anti-corrupt literature that were part of our school curriculum. Books like “The Caucasian Chalk Circle”, or Swahili literature like “Mshtahiki Meya”

  • @Ozgipsy
    @Ozgipsy 2 года назад +5

    I’m reading this right at this moment. A Rebours, and I am loving it. Wonderful video to stumble across.

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  2 года назад

      Thank you :) A Rebours is good fun - you could practically eat the prose up!

  • @Cass_i
    @Cass_i 2 года назад +1

    5:22
    The book is called Against Nature

  • @zag5622
    @zag5622 2 года назад +1

    Found you through the how to read proust video, and was super excited to see that you had made a video on against nature as its one of the first books that got me into reading literature again. The diatribes on literature are my favourite part as they introduced me to many of my favourite writers and poets, like Mallarme who I think Huysmans captures the experience of reading perfectly. Thank you so much for everything on this Channel. Would love if you covered the Durtal Quartet eventually.

  • @AuburnAfterglow
    @AuburnAfterglow 3 года назад +18

    I very much recommend Julian Barnes's book The Man in the Red Coat, which is a non-fiction book that talks about the fin de siecle society in Paris in a very interesting way! That's where I heard about Huysmans and also about the guy who was the actual inspiration behind the protagonist of that book. If you like to read about French culture society of that time, it's really fun :) I have the same Penguin edition of Against Nature, but haven't read it yet :)))

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  3 года назад +2

      Great recommendation :) Thank you so much! I'll check it out! Let me know if you read Against Nature and what you think of it :)

    • @agouti9735
      @agouti9735 6 месяцев назад

      as a baguette imma read it ! tks

  • @ryanoneiljohnson8743
    @ryanoneiljohnson8743 3 года назад +8

    Benjamin, I have a request. It is Faust by Goethe. What books Mephistopheles told his student to know everything of the world? He said metaphysics at earlier list and the list goes farther. Thanks.

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  3 года назад +1

      Amazing request :) I can certainly add this one to the Literary Detective Agency's list of cases to crack!

  • @troylainheckman
    @troylainheckman 2 года назад +3

    Benjamin, your videos are an Absolute Pleasure...Highlight of my day. Thank You.

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  2 года назад

      Thank you, Troy :) That means a lot to me!

  • @danielaayers3449
    @danielaayers3449 3 года назад +11

    Fantastic video! Very helpful to have recommendations on translations. I do agree with the quote “The books that the world calls immoral are books that show the world it’s own shame.” I think any arts and/or media can be a reflection of the most beautiful and inspiring aspects of humanity as well as the most base and shameful. Your hardcover edition of Against Nature is beautiful. I’m so very excited to see more of the Literary Detective series, thank you!

  • @lisas1072
    @lisas1072 Год назад +2

    First, I cannot express how much I love your channel. I discovered it as I reinvested in the study of literature that I had (sadly) neglected to read well (or at all) when I had access to exceptional teachers in high school. I have been utterly delighted with now having access to one so passionate about these works. Second, I think choosing Against Nature as a pleasure read misses the point. I think it’s meant to frustrate the reader with tedious descriptions of indulgences. The point seems to be that such an idyllic life is “against human nature.”

  • @1siddynickhead
    @1siddynickhead 3 года назад +5

    This was so good! As for your question, Art Saves Lives..it's certainly saved me over and over again 😊

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  3 года назад +3

      Beautiful. It has saved me time and time again too. I don't know where I would be without literature.

    • @1siddynickhead
      @1siddynickhead 3 года назад +3

      @@BenjaminMcEvoy exactly! I think it's a refuge and a sanctuary. Especially literature and music. I know we're supposed to eat in order to live but I'm of the opposite opinion when it comes to art and food for that matter, consuming and experiencing art is the main purpose of living for me..it's what makes all the rest of the drudgery well worth it.

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  3 года назад +1

      @@1siddynickhead Absolutely. Beautifully put :)

  • @thomasthompson6378
    @thomasthompson6378 Год назад +1

    I wonder if Huxley got the title for his own novel "Chrome Yellow" from this book "Against Nature" (the phrase is quoted from the latter book in this video).

  • @raginimishra1931
    @raginimishra1931 3 года назад +2

    I am sharing this video's link with my friends they'll be amazed as well

  • @80aj21
    @80aj21 3 года назад +15

    I absolutely believe that art can me a huge influence on the morality and culture of a place - and it is understandable as to why governments and institutions fear them. However, I think art is always coming from a question standpoint - even a intimidating painting from Rothko, to morally grey Bukowski stuff. It is all posing a question and it is how society choses to answer that that becomes important. In my country, we have a book called 'once were warriors' (and a movie following) that posed several massive questions about race, and domestic abuse in a country that we think of as paradise. there was corners who wanted to ban it, but ultimately it lead to both wider understanding and change on a national scale. Art for art's sake is a cop out of what's going on in my opinion, however - it is not on the author to answer the question themselves.

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  3 года назад +2

      You can tell a lot about a government/society by what art it censors. I've been thinking a lot about who we "cannot" talk about today. It shows you who holds the power.. New Zealand? I've had this book recommended to me a few times - I really must read it now. Thank you for the amazing comment :)

  • @TheExceptionalState
    @TheExceptionalState 10 месяцев назад +1

    So nice to hear thoughtful people reflecting on what literature can teach us about the queston. What is a human being? Who am I?
    Many thanks

  • @peskylisa
    @peskylisa 2 года назад +4

    the "yellow covered book"?

  • @HHM706
    @HHM706 2 года назад +2

    George Orwell wrote a great essay about Art and Morality, specifically the Art of Salvador Dali and personality of Dali.

  • @okyouknowwhatever
    @okyouknowwhatever 2 года назад +1

    It sounds like a tale chronicling serial (or permanent) escapism. Reminds me a bit of that scene in Gattaca where Jude Law's paraplegic character says he "travels places in his mind" (though in one of the end scenes kills himself in an oven).

  • @speedracer2841
    @speedracer2841 3 года назад +3

    Great video!

  • @animula6908
    @animula6908 2 года назад +18

    I’ve often noticed the negative catharsis effect, where people read art or say things about art, etc about art, but they use it to avoid real needed action. In America every few years we symbolically reject and denounce racism. But never actually do. When they destroyed the confederate statues, I thought it’s a rededication ceremony to racism. Also, killing the turtle to indulge his sense of beauty was definitely evil.

  • @cliftafrizzell4687
    @cliftafrizzell4687 6 месяцев назад +2

    I always assumed that Dorian was Reading The Yellow Book

  • @Vandalle.
    @Vandalle. 10 месяцев назад

    I love 'A Rebours', it's one of my favourite books. It certainly stayed with me after I'd read it. It lingered in my mind for about a year begging me to read it again, so I gave in, and loved it even more. I've never really thought that it was what made Dorian evil though. For me it was all Henry who did that. I feel like the biggest influence the book had was actually on Oscar himself. That one Chapter after he mentions the book seemed to be heavily influenced by the Huysman's decadent style of writing, though I don't think he quite managed to capture it. Both are incredible books, and two of my all time favourites.

  • @BigLar56321
    @BigLar56321 7 месяцев назад

    I’ve been referred to as Dorian Gray all my life (currently late 60s) because of my youthful appearance that hasn’t changed too much over the years. Given the story though it’s really not a compliment. I guess I should now explore Against Nature and see if it corrupts my character by making me self-indulgent (which we all are to some extent anyway). Thanks for the synopsis and the tip on your recommended translation.

  • @molocious
    @molocious 2 года назад +5

    It's interesting to read A Rebours in the context of Huysmans' oeuvre. The protagonist of the preceding novel, Downstream, a bureaucrat like Huysmans himself, has been described as an impoverished Des Esseintes, while the novel that comes after, La Bas, with a change of character to someone named Durtal, is a bit of a horror story with a lurid account of the Black Mass and a flirtation with Catholic themes in the figure of a bell-ringer. I love Huysmans and have read most of his novels and Baldick's (the translator of the Penguin Edition) biography of him. But I'll offer warnings about two chapters from A Rebours: chapter 3 is probably the most boring--but not to me--chapter in the entire book. It's a "sacriligious" account of the history of Latin literature that symbolizes, in its celebration of Petronius and late Latin authors, the decadence so prevalent as a theme in the novel. The other is Des Esseintes' rendezvous in chapter 9 with an underaged (debatable) boy with whom he subsequently has an enervating affair. Could this be the scene from the novel that help to indict Wilde at his fateful trials? Perhaps. But it's interesting to note that Martin Geeson who inimitably read the book for Librivox in the old John Howard translation had this to say: "Alas, this translation lacks a chapter, and two brief incidents are also suppressed on account of their sexual perversity." Thus the aforementioned scene is cut from chapter 9 in his reading.

  • @SSAENS-yj3jw
    @SSAENS-yj3jw 8 месяцев назад

    What book is similar to this? I remember i read it at 13 and have never been more amazed by another piece of literature ever since

  • @uniomystica4476
    @uniomystica4476 3 года назад +5

    can you pls recommend me good French classical novels

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  3 года назад +4

      Hugo's Les Misérables, Dumas' The Count of Monte Cristo, Proust's In Search of Lost Time should keep you busy for a while, mon cher.

  • @user-hj9jj1xj1u
    @user-hj9jj1xj1u 3 года назад +4

    You're the BEST!!!!😍

  • @8ballstreet
    @8ballstreet 2 года назад +1

    and here I was thinking I was super smart at having figured out that it was Lord Henry who had written the book to further influence Dorian. he was, after all, asked why he hadn't written a book, to which he said that there wasn't an audience for him. with Dorian there would be.

    • @-AtomsPhere-
      @-AtomsPhere- 3 месяца назад

      That’s what I suspected also

  • @Ozgipsy
    @Ozgipsy 2 года назад +3

    I am LOVING A Rebours

  • @Spacetime_ghost
    @Spacetime_ghost 2 месяца назад

    Great video, just subscribed to the channel !
    I personally cannot agree with the statement of reality being “subjective”. I think scientific discoveries and engineering are solid evidence of reality being objective.

  • @kimbre01
    @kimbre01 7 месяцев назад +1

    Lord Henry is just another name for Oscar Wilde.

  • @peskylisa
    @peskylisa 2 года назад +1

    "Those who go too far below the surface do so at their peril" Oscar Wilde

  • @JTonyArts
    @JTonyArts 8 месяцев назад

    I cannot believe I read A Rebours LONG before I read Dorian Gray.

  • @dianasimms1810
    @dianasimms1810 11 месяцев назад +1

    Books are static as is all art. A spectator is required to invoke life, reaction.

  • @judygoddard3869
    @judygoddard3869 11 месяцев назад

    Tolstoy also admired Dickens.

  • @coffeedude
    @coffeedude 2 года назад +3

    So it's basically chapter 11 of The Picture of Dorian Gray but with the length of a whole book? No thank you

  • @peskylisa
    @peskylisa 2 года назад +1

    I think this guy would have escaped into the Star Trek holodeck...or the virtual reality metaverse!

  • @-AtomsPhere-
    @-AtomsPhere- 3 месяца назад

    I always assumed it was a book that Lord Henry wrote himself.

  • @tommyryan3434
    @tommyryan3434 3 года назад +2

    I am going to read it and I let you know oscar Wilde book

  • @jimgallagher8029
    @jimgallagher8029 Год назад

    Are you sure the Yellow Book that drove Dorian to evil and madness was not Chambers’s The King in Yellow?

  • @traciebecker6669
    @traciebecker6669 Год назад

    I am here a year later as often occurs because I read or ordered a book, watched a movie or some such thing and then search for more information about it.
    Spoilers do not bother me anymore than books poisoned me. If it were true books poison us I would have greatly changed my moral character for the worse since I have often read of great evil being thought and done to other human beings.
    If anything books have helped me to grow inwardly for the better because they inspire me.
    A person can choose to let something influence them negatively and imitate wrong, violent or cruel behavior they have read of, but it is a choice. One should not blame a book for poisoning their mind.
    If one feels a book is poisoning their mind they should get rid of the book.
    I have never really had that happen but that is because I would not allow it and if I read a book that's really disgusting I just get rid of it usually I don't finish it if it's that bad.
    We are responsible for what we let poison us or not. Remember those images of the monkeys depicting see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.
    Thank you again for your wonderful commentaries ❤️

  • @poppychyk
    @poppychyk 3 года назад +1

    This is totally not related to Dorian Gray (which is one of my favorite books of all time 😅) but you and Sebastian Vettel look so similar! I don't know if you know him but you seem to be long-lost siblings 🤣

  • @donaldkelly3983
    @donaldkelly3983 Год назад +1

    Some books can be moral but no books are immoral.

    • @BenjaminMcEvoy
      @BenjaminMcEvoy  Год назад +2

      I love that! Wilde thought books to be either well written or badly written, but I think there was a lot of social commentary, irony, and pain in his preface given the events surrounding the book!

  • @RSEFX
    @RSEFX 7 месяцев назад

    I think he read THE GREAT GOD PAN and was off and running. ;-7

  • @cheriepeden6384
    @cheriepeden6384 2 года назад +1

    Against Nature sounds like a useful book to throw at somebody. Oh, the irony. Appearance is the hobgoblin of small minds. There are many aspects of the human condition that are not particularly edifying, and you just cannot brush them under the carpet. Wilde is a tragic figure in that he was ahead of his time. But his ideas are a little stale, coming from a ruling elite who turned on him when they were out doing the exact same thing as him. Writers who embrace the difficulties of life in an unflinching way to me are far more interesting, like Henry Miller who the university establishment woudn't touch with a barge pole and people like me have to discover this kind of stuff for ourselves.

  • @peskylisa
    @peskylisa 2 года назад +2

    I disagree with Mr Wilde, art does influence people to many actions on a profound level.

  • @elisazouza
    @elisazouza 2 года назад +1

    I absolutely adore this book

  • @peskylisa
    @peskylisa 2 года назад

    Sounds a bit like an LSD trip on paper, but I've never experienced that, so......

  • @ivatorres4515
    @ivatorres4515 Год назад

    I love listening to your videos. About Oscar Wilde, l would like you to comment and share with us his brilliant defence he used during his trial. It's a poem.

  • @D.S.handle
    @D.S.handle 3 месяца назад

    12:33 “I spend more time looking up words I didn’t know, than I did enjoy any sort of plot, partly because there were a fuck ton of words I didn’t know”.
    These are my thoughts on the chapter 11 of The Picture of Dorian Gray :D